Most Popular

National Features >

  • Miami New Times

    Budget Ballin'

    South Florida's lawless exotic rental car industry keeps rolling.

    By Gus Garcia-Roberts

  • Houston Press

    Crime Doesn't Pay Back

    In Texas, restitution for victims is nothing but a state-sanctioned sham.

    By Chris Vogel

  • Seattle Weekly

    Hot and Frothy

    If you thought Seattle couldn't fetishize coffee any more, you haven't been to a "cupping" yet.

    By Jonathan Kauffman

Secrets and Satire

By Evan James

Published on October 10, 2007 at 4:20am

Two of the nation's favorite pastimes — listening to other people's secrets and ridiculing everything — find a temporary home tonight as Frank Warren and Harry Shearer give back-to-back readings. Warren's A Lifetime of Secrets: A PostSecret Book began as an invitation to people of all backgrounds (but especially people in love with their in-laws) to send creatively decorated postcards bearing secrets they had never before revealed. The result, aside from an award-winning blog, is a book filled with the kind of personal information that transfixes audiences with its insights into our collective, confessional unconscious. It can also ruin dates. Afterward, Shearer reads and signs Not Enough Indians, a "scathing, bitingly funny" satire, according to press materials, about a down-and-out town that tempts fate by having themselves declared a sovereign Indian nation and opening a casino. Once Shearer starts talking, you might realize that he's also worked for nineteen years as the voices of Mr. Burns, Smithers, Ned Flanders, and Rev. Lovejoy on The Simpsons. Shearer also appeared in This Is Spinal Tap and A Mighty Wind — he's clearly no stranger to scathing, bitingly funny satires.

Warren kicks things off at 6 p.m. and Shearer appears at 8.
Wed., Oct. 17, 2007